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Army Chief Recommends Netflix’s ‘The Great Hack’

BANGKOK — The army chief has recommended people watch a Netflix documentary about how social media can be weaponized to turn the tide of public opinion – it’s happening in Thailand, he says.

Gen. Apirat Kongsompong told press Tuesday that Thais should watch Netflix’s “The Great Hack” to guard themselves against politicians clouding their minds through social media.

“Watch this film. It has similarities to Thailand,” he said. “Political parties can use social media as a propaganda weapon, with youths as their target. The young will absorb information unknowingly, and political parties will exploit it.”

Apirat said he is currently writing a paper on how social media affects Thai society, economics, culture, and politics, which he promised to finish toward the end of August.

“The Great Hack” is a Netflix documentary about the 2018 Cambridge Analytica hacking scandal, in which the company was found to have harvested the data of millions of Facebook accounts to influence opinions through political advertising.

In the aftermath of the March 2019 election, many Thais cried foul that the election was riddled with misformation and fraud. Junta proxy Phalang Pracharath Party came out on top, allowing Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha to become PM after five years as junta leader. His final challenger was Future Forward party head Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, whose party is popular with younger voters.

Apirat isn’t one to shy away from recommending media. In February during campaign season, the hardline royalist recommended that a Pheu Thai Party candidate listen to the anti-Communist anthem, “Nuk Paen Din” or “Scum of the Earth.”

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Thailand to Purchase 60 Strykers from US

US soldiers of the 8th Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment fire mortars from their Stryker during crew certification in May 2008 at Fort Lewis, Washington. Photo: Jason Kaye
US soldiers of the 8th Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment fire mortars from their Stryker during crew certification in May 2008 at Fort Lewis, Washington. Photo: Jason Kaye

BANGKOK — Thailand is set to be the first foreign buyer of US-built Stryker tanks after a purchase was approved by the US.

The US has approved the sale of 60 M-1126 Stryker infantry carrier vehicles to Thailand, which will be delivered starting September for a total of USD$175 million, or 5.38 billion baht. The US’ longtime Southeast Asian ally will be the first non-US country to own them.

“The Stryker vehicles will increase Thailand’s capability to defend its sovereign territory against traditional and non-traditional threats by filling the capability void between light infantry soldiers and heavy mechanized units. Thailand will have no difficulty absorbing this equipment into its armed forces,” reads the statement released by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency.

The agency, under the US Department of Defense, says Congress was notified of the sale Friday.

“The proposed sale of this equipment and support will not alter the basic military balance in the region,” the statement also says. “There will be no adverse impact on US defense readiness as a result of this proposed sale.”

Of the 60 Strykers, 37 are refurbished vehicles previously used by the US Army. The cost of each Stryker averaged 89,775,000 baht per each. The sale also includes extra equipment including machine guns and grenade launchers.

The army initially announced in May that it would purchase 37 Strykers for the 11th Infantry Division in Chachoengsao for 80 million baht each, totalling 2.96 billion baht. Army chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong met with Maj. Gen. John P. Johnson, the Deputy Commanding General of the US Army Pacific (USARPAC), for a meeting from 13 to 17 May in Pattaya.

Transparency activist Srisuwan Janya called out the army on May 15, criticising the high price of the Strykers as exorbitant, especially given several have already been in use by the US army for 20 years.

Thailand previously purchased Black Hawk helicopters from the US in 2009, as well as Lakota helicopters in 2013 and 2014.

Since the May 2014 coup, the Thai military has been expanding its firepower by purchasing submarines, battle tanks, vehicles and jets, including a three-submarine fleet from China. But over the years, the military has also been duped into acquisitions that turned out to be completely fraudulent. These include bogus bomb and narcotic detectors that cost the state millions of baht in damages, and a 350 million baht “security blimp” that proved unable to fly reliably.

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Julie Byrne to ‘Follow Her Voice’ in Bangkok This August

Photo: Julie Byrne / Courtesy
Photo: Julie Byrne / Courtesy

BANGKOK — American singer-songwriter Julie Byrne is returning to Bangkok with her signature guitar plucking this August.

In her second gig in Bangkok, Julie Byrne will perform on August 16 at the reborn cultural hub Lido Connect in Siam Square. Concertgoers can choose to be seated on either a bean bag (1,500 baht) or regular chair (1,300 baht) while chilling out to her dreamy synths.

Tickets are on sale now via Ticketmelon.

Julie Byrne is known to indie listeners for her folk album “Not Even Happiness,” released in 2017, and her debut album “Rooms With Walls and Windows,” released in 2014. The New York artist and part-time park ranger has progressively built up an audience through her nomadic performances around the US. Pitchfork named “Not Even Happiness” one of the 50 best albums of 2017.


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Southeast Asia a Hub of Illegal Wildlife and Timber Trade: UN

Officials inspect some of the 217 pangolins seized on February 2016 in Ratchaburi. Photo: Matichon. Right, Four pangolins are seized on June 2018 at the Thai-Lao border in Chiang Rai.
Officials inspect some of the 217 pangolins seized on February 2016 in Ratchaburi. Photo: Matichon. Right, Four pangolins are seized on June 2018 at the Thai-Lao border in Chiang Rai.

BANGKOK — Despite a continued crackdown on perpetrators, Southeast Asia is becoming an even more prominent hub of illegal wildlife and timber trade, a UN report released earlier this month revealed.

The region connects illegal trade supply chains across African and East Asian markets, according to the report, “Transnational Organized Crime in Southeast Asia: Evolution, Growth and Impact,” by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

Major seizures of illicit wildlife in Southeast Asia and China between Jan. and May this year include: 12.7 tons of pangolin scales and 180 kilograms of carved ivory worth USD$38.7 million from Vietnam seized in Singapore; 9.1 tons of ivory from Africa seized in Vietnam; 24 pieces of rhino horn weighing 40 kilograms worth USD$1 million seized in Hong Kong; and 30 tons of pangolins seized in Malaysia.

As infrastructure development in the region accelerates, the movement of goods within the region and previously remote areas has become more accessible. Two other important drivers of the illicit wildlife market in Asia are the growth of a high-income class that values the display of wildlife products as status symbols, and beliefs in the medicinal value of wildlife products.

The report estimates, for example, that international trade has seen more than one million pangolins killed in the past decade.

“The international trade is driven by the demand for their scales for use in traditional medicines and for the luxury consumption of their meat, primarily in China and Vietnam,” reads the report.

Police seize 76 trafficked pangolins in March 2019 at Prachuap Khiri Khan.

As for illegal timber trade, the report found most illegal trade in Southeast Asia continues to be conducted alongside the legal trade. Formal business enterprises operate through fraudulent or corrupt methods to conceal the illicit origins of products.

“Corruption is a key facilitator of illegal wildlife and timber trades. Bribery and document fraud are commonly used to conceal the contents and origins of cargo, allowing wildlife and timber to be moved with relative ease,” the report said.

Southeast Asia’s proximity to China, which has a voracious appetite for rosewood, has led rosewood to become the world’s most trafficked timber species. Siamese rosewood (dalbergia cochinchinensis) or payung in Thai, which is found in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, is prized in China for making luxury furniture. Burmese rosewood (dalbergia oliveri/bariensis) or pradu in Thai is also increasingly in demand.

The report estimates that up to 50 park rangers were murdered, with roughly an equal number seriously injured, in Thailand from 2009 to 2016 as a result of confrontation with illegal loggers.

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Thailand Seeks Deeper Cooperation as ASEAN Ministers Meet

Prayuth Chan-ocha greets during the opening ceremony of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers meeting in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, July 31, 2019. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / AP
Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha greets during the opening ceremony of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers meeting in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, July 31, 2019. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

BANGKOK — Southeast Asian foreign ministers have opened their annual meeting with a call from host Thailand for deeper cooperation to expand trade and bolster prosperity in the region amid rising global challenges.

The meeting comes in the shadows of rising security tension on the Korean Peninsula, China’s aggressive territorial claims in the South China Sea and the U.S.-China trade war.

Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai told colleagues in the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations they must be more agile amid increasing nationalism globally.

Don said “looking inward and being myopic” is not an option and ASEAN must choose to expand links through the free flow of trade. He said the road ahead could be treacherous but greater cooperation among ASEAN members and outside partners could help sustain long-term growth.

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Jury: Katy Perry’s ‘Dark Horse’ Copied Christian Rap Song

This April 27, 2019 file photo shows Katy Perry at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in New Orleans. Photo: Amy Harris / Invision / AP, File
This April 27, 2019 file photo shows Katy Perry at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in New Orleans. Photo: Amy Harris / Invision / AP, File

LOS ANGELES — A jury on Monday found that Katy Perry’s 2013 hit “Dark Horse” improperly copied a 2009 Christian rap song in a unanimous decision that represented a rare takedown of a pop superstar and her elite producer by a relatively unknown artist.

The verdict by a nine-member federal jury in a Los Angeles courtroom came five years after Marcus Gray and two co-authors, first sued in 2014 alleging “Dark Horse” stole from “Joyful Noise,” a song Gray released under the stage name Flame.

The case now goes to a penalty phase, where the jury will decide how much Perry and other defendants owe for copyright infringement.

Questions from the jury during their two full days of deliberations had suggested that they might find only some of the defendants liable for copyright infringement. The case focused on the notes and beats of the song, not its lyrics or recording, and the questions suggested that Perry might be off the hook.

But in a decision that left many in the courtroom surprised, jurors found all six songwriters and all four corporations that released and distributed the songs were liable, including Perry and Sarah Hudson, who wrote only the song’s words, and Juicy J, who only wrote the rap he provided for the song. Perry was not present when the verdict was read.

Other defendants found liable were Capitol Records as well as Perry’s producers: Dr. Luke, Max Martin and Cirkut, who came up with the song’s beat.

Gray’s attorneys argued that the beat and instrumental line featured through nearly half of “Dark Horse” are substantially similar to those of “Joyful Noise.” Gray wrote the song with his co-plaintiffs Emanuel Lambert and Chike Ojukwu.

“Dark Horse,” a hybrid of pop, trap and hip-hop sounds that was the third single of Perry’s 2013 album “Prism,” spent four weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 in early 2014, and earned a Grammy nomination for Perry, who performed the song during her 2015 Super Bowl halftime show.

Her attorneys argued that the song sections in question represent the kind of simple musical elements that if found to be subject to copyright would hurt music and all songwriters.

“They’re trying to own basic building blocks of music, the alphabet of music that should be available to everyone,” Perry’s lawyer Christine Lepera said during closing arguments Thursday.

The defendants’ musical expert testified that the musical patterns in dispute were as simple as “Mary Had a Little Lamb.”

But the jury of six women and three men disagreed, finding that the bumping beat and riff at the center of “Joyful Noise” were original enough to be copyrighted.

Perry and the song’s co-authors testified during the seven-day trial that none of them had heard the song or heard of Gray before the lawsuit, nor did they listen to Christian music.

Gray’s attorneys had only to demonstrate, however, that “Joyful Noise” had wide dissemination and could have been heard by Perry and her co-authors. They provided as evidence that it had millions of plays on YouTube and Spotify, and that the album it’s included on was nominated for a Grammy.

“They’re trying to shove Mr. Gray into some gospel music alleyway that no one ever visits,” said plaintiffs’ attorney Michael A. Kahn during closing arguments, when he also pointed out that Perry had begun her career as a Christian artist.

Jurors agreed, finding that the song was distributed widely enough that the “Dark Horse” writers may well have heard it.

Kahn and Gray declined comment but smiled as they left the courtroom after the verdict.

Lepera and other defense attorneys also declined comment outside court. Perry’s publicist did not immediately return an email message seeking comment Monday evening.

Perry, a 34-year-old pop superstar and “American Idol” judge, brought laughs to the proceedings when she testified during its second day when her lawyers were having technical troubles getting “Dark Horse” to play in the courtroom.

“I could perform it live,” Perry said.

No performance was necessary after the audio issues were fixed. Jurors heard both songs played back-to-back in their entirety at the end of closing arguments last week.

Story: Andrew Dalton

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Wife Defends Father in Deaths of Twins He Left in Hot Car

Photo: Instagram
Photo: Instagram

NEW YORK — A mother is defending her husband in the deaths of infant twins he left in a hot car in New York City while working an eight-hour shift.

Marissa Rodriguez says her husband, Juan Rodriguez, is a good person and would never have hurt the children intentionally.

She said in a statement to NBC New York that she is “hurting more than I ever imagined possible.”

She said her husband “will never forgive himself for this mistake.”

Juan Rodriguez is charged with two counts each of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

Police said he discovered the twins, Phoenix and Luna Rodriguez, on Friday after finishing work at a Bronx hospital.

He told authorities he thought he had dropped them off at a day care before starting his shift.

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Leonardo di Caprio Thanks Thai Authorities for Rebounding Tiger Numbers

UTHAI THANI — When the lead actor of wilderness survival film “Revenant” tells you your government is doing okay helping tigers, then it’s a sign something is going right.

Numbers of Indochinese tigers in western Thailand are “roaring back,” Leonardo di Caprio said in an Instagram post Tuesday.

“In Thailand’s Huai Kha Khaeng (HKK) Wildlife Sanctuary, tigers are roaring back thanks to a major long-term effort by the government of Thailand,” he wrote.

Di Caprio said that tiger numbers have risen from 41 in 2010 to 66 today, a 60 percent increase. Tigers are even roaming in the region, helping to buoy the population of tigers in Western Thailand as well as Myanmar.

The plight of the tiger isn’t easy in Thailand. In 2016, authorities raided a “tiger temple,” and found 147 tigers, part of a tourist attraction. Footage of Indochinese tigers with new cubs were only taken in Khao Yai National park that same year, when they were feared extinct in the surrounding regions. Thailand and Myanmar are the last remaining sanctury of this specific species.

Listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List, the World Wildlife Foundation attributes the top threats to Indochinese tigers to habitat destruction and poaching for folk remedies.

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Parina Slams Future Forward MP’s Separation With Series of Commandments

Left: Parina Kraikup’s selfie which accompanied the Monday’s post. Photo: Parina Kraikup / Facebook. Center: Pita Limjaroenrat. Photo: Pita Limjaroenrat / Facebook. Right: Chutima Teepanart at the press conference for Disney On Ice presents Mickey's Super Celebration on March 1, 2019.
Left: Parina Kraikup’s selfie which accompanied the Monday’s post. Photo: Parina Kraikup / Facebook. Center: Pita Limjaroenrat. Photo: Pita Limjaroenrat / Facebook. Right: Chutima Teepanart at the press conference for Disney On Ice presents Mickey's Super Celebration on March 1, 2019.

BANGKOK — A pro-government MP on Monday posted ten satirical commandments shaming a Future Forward MP’s alleged abuse of his ex-wife, after he gave a rousing parliamentary speech condemning the government’s agricultural policies.

A few days after Parliament heated up during debate over the new government’s core policies, Phalang Pracharath MP Parina Kraikup took to Facebook to pen yet another social media outburst, this time aimed at Future Forward MP Pita Limjaroenrat’s alleged abuse of his ex-wife.

“New-generation politicians have to hit their wives, forbid them from befriending gay men and tomboys, and place them under a curfew after six,” reads Parina’s post.

Although her post did not mention Pita’s name, the commandments echo accounts of Pita’s behaviour given by his ex-wife, actress Chutima “Tye” Teepanart.

“We broke up because of accumulating conflict,” Chutima said when asked about her broken romance during the Club Friday Show on GMM25. “He grew jealous when I played a role which involved holding hands. After that, more rules emerged, including one that banned me from coming home later than 6pm. Not even business appointments were exempt.”

Parina continued her post with the rules, “Charming a sexy movie star is prohibited” and “One must apologize for such an offense by prostrating,” referring to Chutima’s claim that she once had to kneel before her ex-husband after complimenting the actor Robert Downey Jr.

Chutima, who starred in “Seasons Change,” and “Dear Galileo,” married Pita in 2012, but their marriage fell apart seven years later when Pita filed for a divorce in March. Their legal status and child support obligations remain in dispute.

Parina’s post also criticized a parliamentary speech made by Pita on Friday criticising the government’s agricultural policies, in which the Future Forward MP outlined “five buttons” which deserve the government’s attention: land ownership, farmers’ debts, cannabis, agro-tourism, and water resources.

“Copy government policies and rebrand them as five buttons (the third button is okay, but the rest are just bullshit),” read Parina’s sixth commandment. “This is the guy who would have become our agricultural minister if Future Forward won the election.”

But despite Parina’s dissatisfaction, Pita’s speech won praise from even Interior Minister Gen. Anupong Paochinda, who said, “Honestly, I’m impressed with your speech. I can’t even answer some of the fact you presented.”

Ever since becoming an MP in late May, Parina has been using her Facebook to post criticisms and insults against the Future Forward Party.

On Friday, she even took to Facebook to criticise Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha for calling Future Forward MP Pannika Wanich “beautiful.”

“All the pretty MPs are in Phalang Pracharath, especially me, Parina Kraikup,” she insisted.

Pita has yet to comment on Parina’s comments nor his ex-wife’s recent allegations. In March, he claimed that the court granted him guardianship over the couple’s three-year-old daughter.

“We haven’t officially divorced, but everything has ended,” Pita said.

Pita Limjaroenrat’s speech on Friday (in Thai).

“Dear Galileo” trailer starring Chutima “Tye” Teepanart.

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Rama X Names First Royal Consort in Almost a Century

King Rama X with royal noble consort Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, left, on July 28, 2019.

BANGKOK — King Rama X has bestowed a major-general the title of Royal Noble Consort, the first instance of the title being handed down since the end of absolute monarchy.

On his 67th birthday on Sunday, King Rama X bestowed the title of “Chao Khun Phra,” or Royal Noble Consort, to Maj. Gen. Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, one of his royal guards.

In a televised broadcast of the King’s birthday celebrations, Sineenat was bestowed the rank while the King anointed her with ceremonial water. The Royal Gazette also applauded her position as a kingsguard in the Ratchawallop Police Retainers.

Sineenat, 34, received the following decorations Sunday: The Most Illustrious Order of Chula Chom Klao, 1st Class; The Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant, Special Class; The Most Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand, Special Class; and Rattanaporn Medal, First Class.

Sineenat, formerly Niramon Ounprom, was previously a nurse at the army hospital Ananda Mahidol Hospital.

Rajasap, the Khmer-inspired royal court language used with the royal family, need not be used with those of the Chao Khun Phra rank.

The last time someone was bestowed this title was during the height of absolute monarchy, when Rama VI anointed Rama V’s consort, Chao Khun Phra Prayoon Wong, or Pae Bunnag, in 1921.

The tradition of naming consorts was later abandoned in favor of the monarch having only one spouse. Kings Rama VI, Rama VII and Rama IX all practiced monogamy, while King Rama VIII never married.

In May just before his coronation, King Rama X announced that he had married Gen. Suthida Vajiralongkorn na Ayudhya, therefore elevating her to Queen Suthida.

Left: Royal noble consort Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, right, Royal noble consort Prayooawong or Pae Bunnag. Photo: Nunoiduak / Facebook
Left: Royal noble consort Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, right, Royal noble consort Prayooawong or Pae Bunnag. Photo: Nunoiduak / Facebook

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